Probasco v. Shaw

87 S.E. 466, 144 Ga. 416, 1915 Ga. LEXIS 224
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 87 S.E. 466 (Probasco v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Probasco v. Shaw, 87 S.E. 466, 144 Ga. 416, 1915 Ga. LEXIS 224 (Ga. 1915).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.

1. The judge permitted a witness to testify that the agent of the payees, who sold the horse and received the notes, stated to the purchasers that before he would collect the notes the horse would have to come up to the guaranty; that he did not intend to collect the notes until the horse had proved up to the guaranty.' This evidence was admitted over the objection that the notes could not be contradicted by a contemporaneous parol agreement. It will be observed that each note contained an unconditional promise to pay money. The effect of the testimony would be to contradict the terms of the notes by engrafting into the contract conditions resting in parol, by which the purchasers might not be required to pay the money. There was no evidence that it was intended that such conditions were to be embodied in the notes and were omitted by fraud, accident, or mistake. Under these circumstances it was erroneous to admit the evidence over the objection. Civil Code, §§ 4268, 5752, 5788; Bell v. Americus &c. R., 76 Ga. 754; Lester v. Fowler, 43 Ga. 190; Dinkler v. Baer, 92 Ga. 432 (17 S. E. 953); Brannen v. Brannen, 135 Ga. 590 (b), 591 (69 S. E. 1079).

2. The court allowed certain witnesses to give testimony as to’ the contents of á written contract of guaranty. The evidence was admitted over the objection that the writing was the highest evidence of the facts it was sought to prove, and that there was no evidence laying the foundation for admissioh. of secondary evidence. Inquiry was duly made of the witnesses, and there was sufficient evidence to authorize the judge to find that the paper was lost. Under these circumstances there was no error in admitting the evidence.

3:- The judge charged that if, before the plaintiff purchased the [419]*419notes, any one notified him that the horse was unsound and worthless, or that it was unfit for the purpose for which the defendants bought it, and that they were going to defend against the notes, but the plaintiff nevertheless bought the notes, then the defendants would have a right to set up the plea of worthlessness of the animal if they could sustain it by proof. Error was assigned upon this charge, on the ground that it was not authorized by the evidence and was confusing and misleading. E. B. Camp, a witness for the defendants, testified that after payment of the first note of the series he carried the paid note to Chattanooga, where he went to see Mr. Probasco about it, and “Mr. Probasco told me that he did not own them. I forbid them to trade on the notes, as there was forgery on the face of them. "When the next note came due I went back to see Mr. Probasco, . . but Mr. Probasco told me he had advanced the money on them and would have to make some effort to collect them, and also that Duckworth -Bros, were still bound to him for them.” On cross-examination the witness testified: “I told Mr. Probasco that the horse was unsound.” The plaintiff testified: “My name is H. S. Probasco. I live in Chattanooga, Tennessee; and I am the president of the American Trust & Banking Company. I own.those notes, having bought them shortly after they were made, and before they became due. I see from the interrogatories that I bought them February 7, 1907, less than thirty days after they were given; and they are mine individually. I did not tell Mr. Camp that I had only advanced the money on them; I had already bought and paid for them. Mr. Camp made some complaint about the horse, and said that the notes would not be paid. This occurred on this visit of Mr. Camp’s, and after the notes had been bought and one of them had been paid. I bought the notes from Douglas, supposing that they were all right.” The notes were each indorsed in blank, — one of them being so indorsed by the American Trust & Banking Co. There was uncontradicted evidence that the notes were negotiated and indorsed by Douglas, the agent of the payees, who was duly authorized to do so, and who under proper authority had sold the horse as agent for the payees and received the notes for them. The plaintiff was presumed to be a bona fide holder of the notes without notice, and the plea of failure of consideration would not be available to the defendants without evidence to authorize a finding that the plaintiff took the notes with notice [420]*420of that defense. The plaintiff admitted in his testimony that “Mr. Camp made some complaint about the horse, and said that the notes would not be paid;” but testified that at the time this was done he was already the owner of the notes. If he had become the owner at the time Mr. Camp made this statement to him, of course the statement would not affect him as an innocent holder. But there was a conflict between his testimony and that of the witness Camp. They both referred to the same meeting, and Camp testified that at the time of the meeting referred Mr. Probasco told him that he did not own the notes. If this was the truth of the matter, and Mr. Probasco acquired the notes and Camp made complaint to him about the soundness of the horse and said that the notes would not be paid, it would be for the jury to say whether the plaintiff was affected with notice of the failure of consideration. Accordingly, the charge was authorized by the evidence, and was not confusing as alleged in the assignment of error.

4. The j’udge charged: “After the signing of the notes, if you should find that the plaintiff should take these notes, or any one else, fraudulently and with intent to defraud the makers-of them, and alter them, and write in the words c eight per cent./ so as to make them draw eight per cent, interest either from date or maturity, and that was done fraudulently and with intent to defraud them, I charge you that would be such a material alteration of the notes as would authorize the defendants to vitiate the contract and set it aside’at their will.”' One of the assignments of error upon this charge is, that it is not the law that if such alteration was made by “any one else,” even fraudulently, it would vitiate the notes, but that result would flow from such alteration only when done by some one having an interest' in the notes, or by his agent or another with his knowledge and consent. This criticism upon the charge is well taken. It is the result of the rulings announced in headnotes two to four, inclusive, in this case when it was here on the former occasion (Shaw v. Probasco, 139 Ga. 481, 77 S. E. 577), which appiied Civil Code § 4296. An alteration by a stranger to the note would amount to spoliation of the paper, but would not destroy the rights of the persons legally interested in the paper. 2 Corpus Juris, 1231, § 101; Shirley v. Swafford, 119 Ga. 43 (45 S. E. 722); Burch v. Pope, 114 Ga. 334 (2), 335 (40 S. E. 227).

[421]*4215.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.E. 466, 144 Ga. 416, 1915 Ga. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/probasco-v-shaw-ga-1915.